The most obvious impact of the legislation is that it would prohibit Florida communities from tearing down Confederate monuments.

Hill, R-Pensacola, could not immediately be reached for comment Monday, but in an interview with the Broward Palm Beach New Times, he described the bill as a means of preserving history and providing education.

"It will not change any person's life today by tearing down a Confederate monument or tearing down a statue or tearing down a cross," Hill told the New Times. "It will not change any person's life by doing that. What it will do is prevent someone from learning the history of why it was there in the first place."

The language of the bill states a remembrance on public property "may only be relocated, removed, altered, renamed, rededicated or otherwise disturbed if necessary to accommodate construction, repair, or improvements to the remembrance or to the surrounding property."

Some communities that have similar laws protecting Confederate monuments have circumvented those laws by selling the land around them and allowing the new owner to destroy or remove the remembrance.

Hill's bill dictates that if a public property bearing a monument is sold, the monument must be relocated to a location of "equal prominence."

Under the bill, damaging or defacing a remembrance would be a third-degree felony.

Referencing a statute of abolitionist Frederick Douglass that was vandalized in New York, Hill told the New Times that his bill would protect all Florida's remembrances, not just those honoring the Confederacy.

Hill was first elected to the Florida House in 2013 to represent District 2, becoming at the only black Republican in the state Legislature at the time. He lost a bid for the Florida Senate in 2016, but ran successfully for the District 1 seat in 2018.

A Facebook live video of Mike Hill, a candidate Statehouse District 1, announcing his plan to bring a Trump Walk of Fame star to Pensacola
Mike Hill

Still, he won the election with 61 percent of the vote, after campaigning on conservative issues such a Second Amendment rights, border security and "protecting our American heritage," to include Confederate monuments.

In a 2018 study, the Southern Poverty Law Center identified 1,740 U.S. public monuments, place names and other symbols honoring the Confederacy.

To some, the memorials are important reminders of the country's past and the hundreds of thousands of men who gave their lives in the civil war.

Others see Confederate memorials as glorifying treason and white supremacy.

The Southern Poverty Law Center reports 10 Florida Confederate symbols and 113 symbols total have been removed since 2015 — a wave sparked when a white supremacist gunned down nine parishioners of a black church in Charleston, South Carolina.